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Purity (algebraic geometry)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In the mathematical field of algebraic geometry, purity is a theme covering a number of results and conjectures, which collectively address the question of proving that "when something happens, it happens in a particular codimension".

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Transcription

Purity of the branch locus

For example, ramification is a phenomenon of codimension 1 (in the geometry of complex manifolds, reflecting as for Riemann surfaces that ramify at single points that it happens in real codimension two). A classical result, Zariski–Nagata purity of Masayoshi Nagata and Oscar Zariski,[1][2] called also purity of the branch locus, proves that on a non-singular algebraic variety a branch locus, namely the set of points at which a morphism ramifies, must be made up purely of codimension 1 subvarieties (a Weil divisor). There have been numerous extensions of this result into theorems of commutative algebra and scheme theory, establishing purity of the branch locus in the sense of description of the restrictions on the possible "open subsets of failure" to be an étale morphism.

Cohomological purity

There is also a homological notion of purity that is related, namely a collection of results stating that cohomology groups from a particular theory are trivial with the possible exception of one index i. Such results were established in étale cohomology by Michael Artin (included in SGA 4), and were foundational in setting up the theory to contain expected analogues of results from singular cohomology. A general statement of Alexander Grothendieck known as the absolute cohomological purity conjecture was proved by Ofer Gabber.[3] It concerns a closed immersion of schemes (regular, noetherian) that is purely of codimension d, and the relative local cohomology in the étale theory. With coefficients mod n where n is invertible, the cohomology should occur only with index 2d (and take on a predicted value).[4]

Notes

  1. ^ Zariski, O. (August 1958). "On the Purity of the Branch Locus of Algebraic Functions". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 44 (8): 791–6. doi:10.1073/pnas.44.8.791. PMC 534562. PMID 16590274.
  2. ^ Nagata, M. (August 1958). "Remarks on a Paper of Zariski on the Purity of Branch-Loci". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 44 (8): 796–9. doi:10.1073/pnas.44.8.796. PMC 534563. PMID 16590275.
  3. ^ K. Fujiwara, A proof of the absolute purity conjecture (after Gabber). Algebraic Geometry 2000, Azumino (Hotaka), 153–183.
  4. ^ As formulated in http://www.math.utah.edu/~niziol/icm20062.pdf, p. 4.
This page was last edited on 15 September 2021, at 09:51
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